I apologize about the delays. Between school, work, and lazy, I havent had time to catch up here :lol: Whats about to follow is the good old fashioned art of point to point wiring, a triple bypass on a well worn crossover. In the old days, and presently, speaker manufacturers almost always use bottom of the barrel components in the crossover. Whatever they can get the most of for the least amount of money. On older speakers, chances are some components in these crossovers have drifted out of spec...giving them a woolly sound as well as crossover points beyond what the driver is capable of. When you get all that, you start missing out on some frequency ranges, because theyre filtered out by the inferior components. This particular pair is about 35 years old, with old motor-run caps. Motor-run caps are meant for continuous duty, but they go bad over time. They, like electrolytic capacitors drift from its printed value. On Marcs speakers, I chose Dayton polypropylene caps, which are plastic and have a much longer life, as in decades longer. The Dayton caps are good all-rounders, not great for any particular thing, but good to replace factory parts. The price was right, and Marc wanted his speakers back to factory spec.
This is the layout. The stock layout was nice and neat, so all I had to do was mount a few retainers for the capacitors. These will help keep things nice and tidy, just as PWK intended.
Check and make sure the cap is snug, we want things to be in there good.
Using my grandpas old needle nose pliers. Taking a guess, Id have to say theyre close to 70 years old...or more.
All laid out, now its time to booger weld
This is a 1uF Solen capacitor. This needs to be paralleled with the 12uF Dayton in order to get the factory 13uF rating.
Bend the leads, and hang it over the 12uF momentarily.
Now we have to cut and strip the wire to length. This is just plain old 18AWG hookup wire. Same as stock, with a thinner jacket.
Now its time to solder. First things first, gotta tin the tip. Tinning helps solder flow over the components
This is the wire that connects the mid to the terminal block, where it will be wired to the mid-horn. The 2uF tweeter cap filters signals lower than 4500Hz, while everything lower will go to the mid-horn.
These are the mid-range caps, whose values were chosen to filter out frequencies lower than 400Hz. Humans are most sensitive in the midband, or telephone band as its known. 300Hz to 3000Hz.
Now we have to trim off the excess leads...they arent needed, and just plain old look bad.
Mount the woofer inductor, autotransformer, and solder up the zener diodes. These diodes protect the tweeter. If more than 5W hits them, they close to save the tweeter. Klipsch speakers dont need big power. 5W will blow you out of the room.
These fork terminals are needed to wire the crossover to the terminal block.
Make sure everythings nice and snug.
All done, now its time to test them and make sure everything checks out
